Following a summer run at Goodspeed-at-Chester/The Norma Terris Theatre in Connecticut, the new musical, Summer of '42, has its Midwest premiere at the Victoria Theatre in Dayton, OH, Oct. 10-22.

Following a summer run at Goodspeed-at-Chester/The Norma Terris Theatre in Connecticut, the new musical, Summer of '42, has its Midwest premiere at the Victoria Theatre in Dayton, OH, Oct. 10-22.

Goodspeed is producing the Ohio run with its previous set and cast intact, including Idina Menzel as war bride Dorothy, who teaches a teenager named Hermie (newcomer Ryan Driscoll) a bittersweet lesson in love. The musical by librettist Hunter Foster and composer-lyricist David Kirshenbaum is based on the 1971 film by screenwriter-novelist Herman Raucher.

*

The show's developmental world-premiere run in Chester, CT, played Aug. 10-Sept. 10. There, audiences cheered the comic and rueful musical so much that an extra week was added to the original run. The tuner, directed by Gabriel Barre, draws on Raucher's 1971 screenplay and earlier novel of the same name.

During the Connecticut run, the creators of the new musical made changes and refinements to their show, cutting one song and adding a new one. The writers were in residence during the run. By the end of the Norma Terris run, "Losing Track of Time," which has been recorded by Alice Ripley, was moved from Act Two to Act One and a new tune, "Our Story So Far," has been added to Act Two, for the war-bride character, Dorothy. A number for her called "Less Than Perfect" has been cut.

The sentimental crowd-pleaser, about a 15-year-old boy's summer adventures with his pals on an island in Maine during the summer of 1942, stars Menzel (Rent) as a lonely war bride who befriends young Hermie.

It was announced Aug. 30 that the hit staging (with a cast of eight) will transfer to the Victoria Theatre, at 138 N. Main Street, in Dayton, OH.

Tickets range $26-$51. Call (937) 228-3630 for information.

*

The Ohio booking will be the first time the show faces critics. As a developmental space, Goodspeed-at-Chester has a gentleman's agreement with critics allowing the works-in-progress to go unreviewed, despite a tendency toward sold-out houses and star names.

Conceivably, other regional presenters could attend the Dayton booking and express interest in bookings in their markets. The creators, of course, are hoping for a New York berth.

Observers have suggested the warm, humorous, bittersweet musical could have a huge life regionally, the same way Nunsense, Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?, Over the Tavern, The Foreigner, The Nerd, The Immigrant and other works became mini-industries.

The Ohio move was arranged with Dione Kennedy, managing director of the Victoria, a 1,100-seat touring house in Dayton. Kennedy came to Chester, CT, for the developmental run of the show at Goodspeed's 200-seat Norma Terris, and thought her audience would embrace it. Victoria audiences have been informed that the show contains mature subject matter and adult language.

Other producers such as Barry and Fran Weissler, Edgar Dobie and Tom and Jack Viertel also came to sample Summer of '42 in Connecticut.

Hunter Foster is the New York actor who has appeared in the recent Grease! revival and Footloose. Composer-lyricist Kirshenbaum may be best known for Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus. He won a Jonathan Larson Performing Arts Foundation Award for Summer of '42. He was cabaret director at Williamstown Theatre Festival has musical-directed at York Theatre Company in Manhattan.

Menzel, a Tony Award nominee for Rent, played Kate in Barre's spring 2000 staging of Andrew Lippa's The Wild Party at Manhattan Theatre Club.

Manhattan and regional readings of Summer of '42 preceded the Goodspeed staging.

The tuner had readings in New York City and Ann Arbor, MI, in 1999.

*

Though critics were lukewarm, Robert Mulligan's 1971 film, "Summer of '42," became a big box office draw, with new star Jennifer O'Neill and composer Michel LeGrand receiving special attention. The story told of a 15-year-old boy, Hermie, drawn into a relationship with Dorothy, a beautiful war-bride.

Nick Corley staged previous readings of Summer of '42.

Songs in the show have included "Someone To Dance With Me," "Will That Ever Happen To Me?" and the solo for Dorothy, "Losing Track of Time" (which has been recorded).

Asked about how Summer came into fruition, composer-lyricist Kirshenbaum told Playbill On-Line in 1999: "It was Hunter Foster's idea, and we've been working on it just over a year in earnest. He and I went to the University of Michigan together. In fact, he had a lead role in the first musical I ever wrote. Anyway, he had the idea, and I said, `if you can get the rights to it, go ahead,' figuring these things are impossibly complicated. Hunter's lawyer approached [screenwriter] Herman Raucher's lawyers, and in a month we had the rights. We started working on it February of last year and held a private reading for ourselves in March."

Asked what he felt was special about the material, Kirshenbaum said, "It's a memory play. People remember the movie's nostalgic element, the relationship between Dorothy and Hermie, but I think the piece is more about loss. It's very touching. Through this first love of his life, Hermie goes through every kind of emotion you can experience in a relationship. Of course, it's also very funny."